Ethnic Cleansing as State Policy
Netanyahu's
"Peace" Plan
By NICOLA
NASSER
July 2, 2009
Counter Punch
http://www.counterpunch.org/nasser07022009.html
In
his speech at Bar Ilan University on June 14, Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu proposed a new Israeli “peace plan,” with
preconditions that a Palestinian negotiator must first meet before
he would “promptly” engage in “unconditional” bilateral talks to
meet an international consensus demanding the creation of a
Palestinian state alongside Israel. His preconditions added to the
fourteen conditions the former Israeli government of comatose Ariel
Sharon attached to Israel’s adoption in grudge of the 2003 Road Map
blueprint for peace with the Palestinian side, on the basis of which
the U.S. administration of President Barak Obama and his
presidential envoy George Mitchell are now urging an early
resumption of “immediate” Israeli – Palestinian peace talks, which
Mitchell on June 26 hoped “very much to conclude this phase of the
discussions and to be able to move into meaningful and productive
negotiations in the near future."
Sharon’s conditional approval of the Road Map has condemned the
blueprint as a non-starter, led to the Israeli military reoccupation
of the Palestinian autonomous areas, aborted former U.S. President
George W. Bush’s promise to Palestinians to have their own state
twice in 2005 and 2008, and doomed the twenty – year peace process
since the Madrid conference in 1991 to its current impasse that
Obama and Mitchell are trying to break through. It is a forgone
conclusion that Netanyahu’s preconditions -- Palestinian recognition
of Israel as a “Jewish state,” “demilitarization” of the prospective
Palestinian less-than-a-sovereign state and preserving Israel’s
illegitimate “right” to expand its illegal colonial Jewish
settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories -- will fare
worse than Sharon’s conditions.
Netanyahu demanded that the “Palestinian population,” and not the
Palestinian people -- who live “in Judea and Samaria,” and not in
the Israeli – occupied Palestinian territory, where there is an
“Israeli presence,” and not an Israeli military occupation -- should
first agree to a “public, binding and unequivocal” recognition that
Israel is “the nation state of the Jewish people” worldwide, and not
the nation state of the Israelis. His demand was an arrogant
precondition ridiculed by Gideon Levy in Haaretz on June 15 as an
“excessive demand that Palestinians recognize the Jewish state by
one who has failed to recognize the Palestinians as a people,”
sarcastically welcomed the next day by Ma'ariv’s chief political
columnist, Ben Caspit, who wrote: “Welcome, Mr. Prime Minister, to
the 20th century. The problem is that we're already in the 21st.”
Moreover, such a precondition “is almost humiliating and it is
unlikely to be met,” by the Palestinian Authority (PA), according to
Avi Issacharoff, writing in Haaretz on June 17.
Israeli analyst M.J. Rosenberg wrote on June 19: Acceptance of
Israel as a “Jewish state” is a non-starter at this point. And
Netanyahu knows it. If that is a precondition for negotiations,
there will be no negotiations. But without any definition of borders
and with Netanyahu committed to expanding settlements in the West
Bank, how can anyone seriously expect Palestinians to recognize
Israel as a “Jewish state?” Aaron David Miller, a former senior U.S.
negotiator in the Mideast, said Netanyahu’s speech “was less about
pursuing Arab-Israeli peace and much more about pursuing the
U.S.-Israeli relationship.”
PA’s Prime Minister in Ramallah, Salam Fayyad, noted in a speech at
Al-Quds (Jerusalem) University on June 22 that his Israeli
counterpart’s speech missed all reference to the Road Map blueprint
as well as to the thorny issue of expanding settlements and
described the speech as "a new blow to efforts to salvage the peace
process." Head of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)’s
department of negotiations affairs, Saeb Erakat, condemned
Netanyahu’s speech as a “non-starter.” Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas urged the international community to isolate him and his
government. His Egyptian counterpart, Hosni Mubarak, a close ally of
Abbas and the U.S. and Israel’s 30-year unwavering peace partner,
said Netanyahu’s precondition “aborts the chance for peace,”
although he declined to heed Abbas’ call for the isolation of
Netanyahu and received him and others of his cabinet. Al-Baath, the
mouthpiece of Syria's ruling party, commented: “Netanyahu has
confirmed that he rejects the Arab initiative for peace.” In an
editorial on June 16, the Saudi Arabian English daily, “Arab News,”
said his speech was “a challenge to the world community.” Walid
Jumblat, a leading figure of the March 14 bloc, which recently won
the Lebanese elections, lambasted the speech as dragging the region
into a “dangerous stage” and one that “completely crippled” any
possibility to reach a peace settlement, adding that, “any talk
about Israel as a Jewish state means closing the file on the
(Palestinian right of) return,” on which there is a consensus among
rival Lebanese factions to reject the resettlement of half a million
Palestinian refugees hosted by Lebanon since 1948.
However Obama and Mitchell insensitively ignored all negative
Palestinian and Arab reactions, repeatedly and on record renamed
Israel as the “Jewish” State of Israel, with Obama lightly trying to
defuse the explosiveness of Netanyahu’s demand by stating that it
was “exactly what negotiations are supposed to be about,” because
“this is what both America and Europe are asking,” according to
Italian foreign minister Franco Frattini.
Angrily describing Netanyahu as a “swindler” who plays “tricks” with
peace – making, Yasser Abed Rabbo, secretary general of the PLO’s
executive committee, said the Israeli premier wants Palestinians to
“become Zionists.” Mere heartfelt commitment to Zionism will not be
enough, however, Hasan and Ali Abunimah wrote in The Electronic
Intifada on June 17, for the Palestinians' conversion to have
“practical meaning,” Netanyahu explained, “there must also be a
clear understanding that the Palestinian refugee problem will be
resolved outside Israel's borders.” In other words, “Palestinians
must agree to help Israel complete the ethnic cleansing it began in
1947-48, by abandoning the right of return,” Abunimah brothers
added.
In a statement, five PLO member factions, namely the Popular Front
for the Liberation of Palestine, the Democratic Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, the Palestinian People's Party, the
Palestinian National Liberation Movement and the Palestinian Popular
Struggle Front, said Netanyahu’s speech was “tantamount to a
declaration of war on Palestinians' national rights.” For the first
time since the Palestinian – Israeli “peace process” was launched
some twenty years ago, the voice of the PLO peace partners was much
louder and harsher in criticizing Israel than that of their
opposition among the non-PLO factions, like Hamas and the Islamic
Jihad. Netanyahu seems to have succeeded where four years of
Egyptian efforts have failed to make Palestinians speak in one
voice.
When Netanyahu makes Palestinian recognition of Israel as a “Jewish
state” as the cornerstone of his “peace” policy and has Avigdor
Lieberman, who calls on record for the transfer of Israeli Arab
Palestinians, as the foreign minister of his ruling coalition, he
officially raises ethnic cleansing to the level of state policy, and
may be this is why French President Nicolas Sarkozy reportedly urged
visiting Netanyahu on June 30 to replace his top diplomat and “to
get rid of that man,” whom he declined to meet when Lieberman was
recently in Paris, leading Israeli member of Knesset Afu Aghbaria (Hadash)
and ten others of his parliamentary colleagues to call on world
leaders to declare what they condemn as the “racist” Lieberman a
persona-non-grata. Another Hadash MP, Hanna Swaid, wrote to
Mitchell: "The recognition of Israel as a Jewish state harms the
Arab citizens (25% of the population), undermines their legal status
in the country and puts them at the heart of the struggle with no
representation in the negotiations.”
Recognizing Israel as a/or the “Jewish state” should be rejected not
only because it politically forecloses whatever chance remains for
the resumption of peace talks and sets the regional stage for the
alternative, which another peace partner to Israel, Jordan’s King
Abdullah II, has repeatedly warned against because it “would have
adverse and catastrophic consequences on the whole region,” but more
importantly because strategically such a precondition, if it gains
international recognition, would inevitably be used by Israel as a
casus belli to officially resume -- what has been so far claimed an
unofficial policy by neutral monitors and officially denied by
Israeli politicians – and defend its ethnic cleansing of native Arab
Palestinians as an internationally –recognized state policy inside
its borders, and in the Palestinian territories it occupied in 1967
outside them, and as an international carte blanche vindicating what
the Israeli historian, Ilan Pappe documented as its more than
sixty-year old “The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine.”
Politically this would rule out the Palestinian refugees’ “Right of
Return” and legitimize Lieberman’s “transfer” dreams (expulsion en
masse of Israel’s Arab - Palestinian citizens as well as Palestinian
natives of East Jerusalem) to be made true as soon as the political
timing render their realization feasible, to throw “the Arabs into
the sea,” according to Aharon Barak, the former president of the
supreme court of Israel from 1995 to 2006, who was speaking at the
Rabin Center in Tel Aviv on June 25.
Israeli governmental and parliamentary officials of Netanyahu’s
ruling coalition criticized Barak's support for “a state for all its
citizens.” It would be very instructive here to recall the first
Prime Minister of Israel and forefather of ethnic cleansing David
Ben-Gurion’s reaction to the news that the world renowned physicist
Albert Einstein declined the offer of the Israeli presidency in
1952: “Tell me what to do if he says yes! If he accepts, we are in
trouble,” he said, because Einstein “would distinguish between
Jewish homeland and state, and argued for a bi-national state where
Jews and Arabs shared a common land, not a strictly defined “Jewish
state,” according to Fred Jerome, who in June published his new
book, “Einstein on Israel and Zionism: His Provocative Ideas about
the Middle East” (St. Martin’s Press).
More instructive than Einstein’s arguments and Ben-Gurion’s reaction
was the U.S. President Harry S. Truman’s proclamation, just 11
minutes after the state's unilateral declaration, that, “The United
States recognizes the provisional government (proclaimed by Jews “in
Palestine”) as the de facto authority of the new State of Israel,”
and NOT as “the new Jewish State” as proposed by the American Jewish
leaders, crossing out the proposed words and replacing them in his
own handwriting with “the new state of Israel.” Obviously,
Netanyahu’s precondition “was devised because Netanyahu understands
that Palestinians will never accept it because it negates their
standing in a land they have inhabited from time immemorial.”
(Rosenberg on June 14)
Czech Republic Foreign Minister Jan Kohout, visiting Israel on June
28, said in an exclusive interview with The Jerusalem Post: “First
we have to understand what is meant by this [Jewish state demand].
So far, I can say that I don't have a clear picture on that.”
“Resolution 181 (UN Resolution 181, also called the 1947 UN
Partition Plan) calls for recognition of Israel as a Jewish state.
But at the same time it gives equal rights to all of its citizens,”
said Kohout, who seemed not interested in recent history to note
that the Israel recognized by the UN Resolution 181, which at the
time had a population of some (500,000) Jews and (438,000) Arab
Palestinians, is very much smaller than the one we know now, which
enjoys a de facto, but not yet a de jure, international recognition,
thanks to Israel’s "War of Independence" using Plan D to “cleanse”
Palestine, according to Pappe and to five major territorial
expansionist wars, dubbed “preventive” or “pre-emptive” wars by
Israeli strategists, who launched them to secure their ethnic
cleansing exploits, claiming with their former premier, Golda Meir,
that there was “no Palestinian people” to cleanse.
To ethnically cleanse the Palestinians was the very basis of
Israel’s raison-d’être. Speaking of the Arabs of Palestine (Complete
Diaries, June 12, 1895 entry), Theodore Herzl, founder of the World
Zionist Organization, said: “Spirit the penniless population across
the frontier by denying it employment... Both the process of
expropriation and the removal of the poor must be carried out
discreetly and circumspectly.” The tragic result was summarized by
Israel’s minister of defense during the 1967 war, Moshe Dayan, in an
address to the Technion, Haifa, (Haaretz, April 4, 1969): “Jewish
villages were built in the place of Arab villages. You do not even
know the names of these Arab villages, and I do not blame you
because geography books no longer exist. Not only do the books not
exist, the Arab villages are not there either. Nahlal arose in the
place of Mahlul; Kibbutz Gvat in the place of Jibta; Kibbutz Sarid
in the place of Huneifis; and Kefar Yehushua in the place of Tal
al-Shuman. There is not a single place built in this country that
did not have a former Arab population.”
It seems clear now that the UN General Assembly Resolution 4686 of
1991, which revoked an earlier one equating Zionism with racism (the
1975 Resolution 3379), was a premature measure.
Kohout, whose country was the former rotating president of the
European Union, is not a rare species in demanding to “understand
what is meant” by the “Jewish state” precondition. One could not but
recall the Venetian word “ghetto,” once meant for the Jews of
Europe. The Israeli leadership seems now in the grips of a “ghetto
mentality” racing against the modern times of pluralism and
coexistence, when nations are moving towards a globalized
21st-century identity of citizenship by allegiance, regardless of
race, creed or gender, and at a time when the French translation of
Israeli academic Shlomo Sand’s “The Invention of the Jewish People”
is granted this year’s French prestigious Aujourd’hui Award for a
book which argues that Zionism in modern times “invented” the
concept of the “Jewish people” as well as their “imaginary”
historical connection to Palestine.
Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in
Bir Zeit of the Israeli – occupied Palestinian West Bank.
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